• 0 Posts
  • 8 Comments
Joined 11 months ago
cake
Cake day: October 25th, 2023

help-circle


  • I used to have a similar automation for putting the garbage cans out the night before and bringing them back in the next evening. I was even planning to add sensors to the cans to verify if they had been moved or not.

    Then I switched to a pair of recurring alarms on my phone and found it was easier to deal with. If I decided one day to put them out or bring them in earlier, I just swiped down and dismissed the alarm.


  • You have a bunch of Wi-Fi devices which talk to the “cloud”. The Samsung App lets you set up a cloud account which can run various routines over the internet. So a sensor might trigger a routine on the Samsung servers that then talk to a device’s cloud server telling it to contact device in your house and turn on.

    As you can see, that’s a lot of communication over the internet. If you want faster response times and less dependence on an always-on internet connection, you can get a local hub that talks locally over a Z-Wave or ZigBee mesh of devices.

    The Samsung Station can support ZigBee (but not Z-Wave) and Matter devices. So if you were planning to change devices you might find a benefit to having a local hub.

    Currently it seems like you don’t need it, but you could start building a network of local devices running ZigBee or Matter. You can still have your existing Wi-Fi devices but have any new devices working locally instead.



  • A couple options:

    Install smart 3-way switches (or dimmers) using ZigBee, Z-Wave or Matter protocols instead of the dumb “analog” switches. You’ll need a smart hub that acts as the centralized controller. The switches still handle on/off at the wall (or dimming if you want that as well), but you can use voice control or routines to adjust them.

    Add smart relays behind the switches. I believe Zooz has some smart relays that use Z-Wave. Again you’d want a hub that can talk Z-Wave. There are Wi-Fi versions like Sonoff or Shelley, but you said you want to avoid that.



  • In theory you should be able to control a switched 15A outlet. A couple things could be an issue.

    Perhaps the white wire is not an actual neutral but part of the switched hot. Can you confirm it is a neutral?

    Second given this is to an outdoor outlet it might be GFCI rated which may not work. Have you contacted Eaton for support?